Interpol hits back at Malaysia claim that int’l police to blame for MH370 passport confusion

Officials from Interpol refuted a claim from Malaysia Friday in which the government said it could not check through the international police agency’s passport database because the process was too much of a burden.

As international investigators continue their search for the
missing Malaysia Airlines flight that disappeared weeks ago, the
Malaysian government revealed it had not checked the passports of
the missing passengers with Interpol’s database, which lists
stolen passports.

Interior Minister Zahid Hamidi told the Malaysian parliament
Wednesday that Interpol’s vast database of lost passport records
was “too large” and would be too much for Malaysia’s
database management system, according to Reuters quoting the local Malay Mail Online.

“Furthermore, Interpol’s information of lost (passports) may
slow down the process of immigration checks at counters,”
Zahid said.

Two passengers were able to board flight MH 370 with stolen
Austrian and Italian passports. The plane, which has still not
been recovered, was last tracked over the South China Sea on
March 8 with 239 people on board. The authorities have said they
do not think the two passengers in question had anything to do
with the mystery.

Interpol has taken exception to the country’s assertion. The
Lyon, France-based agency said Friday that no member country has
ever complained that the process is too slow, in part because it
takes under a second to find out if a passport is listed as
stolen.

“Malaysia’s decision not to consult INTERPOL’s Stolen and
Lost Travel Documents (SLTD) database before allowing travellers
to enter the country or board planes cannot be defended by
falsely blaming technology or INTERPOL,” it said. “If
there is any responsibility or blame for this failure, it rests
solely with Malaysia’s Immigration Department.”

Frustration with Malaysia stretches far beyond the offices of
Interpol, though, as a large boycott of all things Malaysian has
been organized in China in response to what millions of people
perceive as a flawed investigation.

Barbara Demnick of the Los Angeles Times reported on Friday that the
families of the missing passengers who have gathered at Beijing’s
Lido hotel since March 8 protested a Malaysia Airlines press
conference rather than listen to another update. There were 227
passengers onboard the flight, 153 of them Chinese.

“I just want to say to the Chinese families – it is not just
them,” Malaysian transportation minister Hishamuddin Hussein
said Friday at a press conference in Kuala Lumpur. “Fourteen
other nations have lost family members.”

A number of Chinese ticketing agencies have prohibited the sale
of airplane tickets to Malaysia, with a spokesman from eLong
travel saying the agency would keep the policy in place
“indefinitely until the Malaysian government and Malaysia
Airlines release every piece of information they have in order to
find out the truth of the missing flight as soon as
possible.”